Statutorily Created vs. Fundamental – Whose Rights Reign Supreme?
In 2021, SB 80 made substantial
additions and changes to Chapter
39. One of the most significant
changes is section 39.522(3)(c)4.a.
that grants “party status” to a current
caregiver under certain conditions.
This portion of the statute, which is the
focus of this article, has caused much
confusion and led to a flurry of litigation
whereby foster parents and caregivers
hired attorneys to essentially attempt
to “win” custody of children in actions
against the parents. While this change to
Chapter 39 was clearly never intended
to apply to children who were in the
process of reunifying with parents, the
statutorily created “right” to party
status, caused situations where those
“rights” of foster parents resulted in an
interference with parents’ fundamental
rights to their own children as the courts
struggled to decide which rights reigned
supreme. In 2023, the First District Court
of Appeal (DCA) put the matter to rest
in Statewide Guardian ad Litem Office v.
J.B., 361 So. 3d 419 (Fla. 1st DCA 2023).
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